The Guardian by Owen Gibson picked apart Premier League clubs' "price stretching" mantras and said: "A cap of, say, £30 for away tickets is a clanging no-brainer in PR terms and in reality has little downside."

There were further warnings to clubs from our own chair, Malcolm Clarke, reported across the BBC, BT Sport and The Daily Mail. Pricing their loyal and traiditional supporter base, Malcolm said, would be detrimental to clubs in the long term.

Malcolm told PA Sport: "The proposal to have a £30 cap on away tickets was blocked by a number of clubs but with the publicity and focus on the issue there is now a groundswell of support for change."

High profile figures connected to Liverpool, such as Jamie Carragher and Roy Evans, were criticial of the club and backed the action. Even current manager Jurgen Klopp had to speak on the issue, carefully admitting in a pre-match press conference that such a row over ticket prices was "not what we want".

Somewhat lost in the post-protest coverage was the plight of disabled fans, who face some of the biggest hikes at Anfield next year. "How can a price rise of such magnitude be justified for people of limited income and limited lifestyle?" asked disabled Liverpool fan Richard Monaghan in The Guardian.

The Evening Standard had a close look at how the Premier League London clubs are "tackling the crisis over ticket prices." Discussing the FSF's Twenty's Plenty campaign, Evening Standard columnist Paddy Barclay said that not just away fans should benefit from the huge TV windfall - clubs have to do more for home fans too.

"Liverpool’s commercial partners, including Subway, have already been targeted by an email and social media campaign as fans mobilise against a new price structure which includes some £77 tickets in the redeveloped Main Stand," noted Herbert.